Brooklyn College

City University of New York
Not a member yet
    32180 research outputs found

    Deuce Redemption: Grindhouse Cinema, Moral Panic, And Urban Renewal

    Full text link
    If you consult standard histories of the “redevelopment” of 42nd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenue, AKA “the Deuce,” you will read that it was filled with nothing but criminals and pornographers, that decent people avoided it at all costs, and the only way the block could be “saved” was by seizing it via eminent domain, evicting all the current tenants, and replacing them with Disney and its fellow entertainment corporations. The purpose of this thesis is to offer a more nuanced alternative to these standard histories. I will argue that the Deuce was a lower-class, multiracial, queer entertainment district that was destroyed not because of crime or pornography or even real estate, but because it offended the elites. Chapter 1 covers the history of the Deuce roughly from its inception in 1895 to the 1975 New York fiscal crisis. It traces the evolution of the Deuce from a straight, white, upperclass entrainment district to a queer, multiracial, lowerclass entertainment district. It also describes the attempts by various mayors (Fiorello LaGuardia, Robert Wagner, John Lindsay, Abe Beame) to halt or reverse this evolution through assorted “clean up” campaigns. Chapter 2 covers the history of the Deuce from 1975 to 1985. It shows how the 1975 fiscal crisis was used as an excuse to “redevelop” the Deuce, and how plans for this changed over time before finally being rammed through by city and state government officials (Governors Hugh Carey and Mario Cuomo, Mayors Ed Koch and David Dinkins), with the backing of the real estate industry, over the objections of large and diverse segments of the community. It also shows how the good intentions of a sociologist like William Kornblum, Professor Emeritus of the Graduate Center, can be co-opted by the political process. Chapter 3 covers the history of the Deuce from 1985 to 1995. It shows how the approved plans to “redevelop” the Deuce fell apart, how there were ample reasons to cancel the project, but government officials persisted out of a mixture of stubbornness, inertia, and political expediency

    Effects of BRCA1-Mediated Ubiquitination of HuR on RNA Metabolism in Breast Cancer

    Full text link
    BRCA1, a gene encoding for the tumor suppressor protein BRCA1, is involved in DNA repair as well as many other important cellular processes. BRCA1, together with BARD1 (BRCA1 Associated RING Domain 1) also functions as an E3 ubiquitin (Ub) ligase. BRCA1 mutation in the RING domain, which is responsible for E3 ligase activity, is associated with increased risk of developing breast cancer. Despite extensive research on the activities of BRCA1, the E3 ligase activity and implications of this activity in cancer are not well understood. This dissertation examines the ubiquitination of the RNA binding protein Human antigen R (HuR) by BRCA1/BARD1 and the implications of this ubiquitination event on gene expression in breast cancer. HuR binds to mRNA targets in the nucleus and escorts them to the cytoplasm, typically stabilizing them and, hence, regulating gene expression. Oligomerization of HuR is necessary for proper interaction with and stabilization of these mRNA targets. HuR targets are involved in important processes such as cell proliferation, apoptosis, carcinogenesis, and DNA damage response (DDR). Cytoplasmic HuR is correlated with more severe forms of breast cancer, and HuR is a potential target for breast cancer therapies. Previous studies have shown that non- degradative ubiquitination of HuR causes detachment from target transcripts. Additionally, data from our lab showed that BRCA1/BARD1 can ubiquitinate HuR. However, the effects of this ubiquitination on HuR sub-cellular localization, HuR oligomerization, and transcript binding and stabilization have not been established yet. In this dissertation, I show that HuR is ubiquitinated by BRCA1/BARD1 at Lysine 313 (K313) in the RNA recognition motif 3 (RRM3), and that HuR localization in chromatin increases when ubiquitination at K313 is compromised. Furthermore, my studies indicate that the UV- induced increase in cytoplasmic HuR observed in breast cancer cells with functional BRCA1 is lost in cells with compromised BRCA1-mediated ubiquitination. Furthermore, BRCA1/BARD1- mediated ubiquitination of HuR at K313 alters HuR oligomerization and its binding to target transcript CDKN1A, and preliminary data indicates CDKN1A stability is also affected. Together, these findings elucidate a new pathway through which BRCA1 mutations may lead to transcriptome dysregulation and alter gene expression in breast cancer patients, influencing disease outcomes and therapy success

    Factors Affecting Pretonic Deletion in English Syllables: A Corpus Study

    Full text link
    One type of variation in pronunciation that is associated with fast and/or conversational speech is massive reduction, in which entire syllables are deleted. We focus on a subtype of massive reduction, pretonic vowel deletion, where the vowel in an unstressed syllable is deleted and the flanking consonants form an onset cluster, V --\u3e φ / C__C, such as the word Columbus reduced to the two-syllable pronunciation [klʌmbəs], resulting in the onset cluster [kl]. The main question asks what predictors are associated with pretonic vowel deletion. Furthermore, we evaluate the Lexicalist Hypothesis and Sonority Projection as explanations of the phenomenon. The results indicate that sonority distance, cluster type frequency, and word frequency have significant and independent contributions to massive reduction. This supports a combination of the Lexicalist Hypothesis and Sonority Projection accounts

    Complicity

    Full text link
    What does it mean to be complicit in diffuse collective wrongs like structural racism, gender-based oppression, or environmental damage, and what responsibilities are entailed by complicity? Moral philosophers have often understood complicity to consist in some degree of inherited culpability, arising from knowing or intentional contributions to the bad acts of a primary wrongdoer. But these theories fail to explain complicity in the foregoing contexts, and cannot justify needed efforts to hold individuals accountable for unwitting contributions to systemic wrongs and injustices. In response to this gap, my dissertation defends a novel reconceptualization of complicity as participation in collectively perpetrated wrongs, including structural injustice. A broad notion of participation – which requires neither intentions nor knowledge (nor culpable ignorance) – can explain the source of complicity across a range of collective wrongs, and capture a variety of actions and omissions including those that merely reproduce or ratify harmful systems. I further demonstrate that complicity does not entail blameworthiness, but that even non-culpable complicity will generate moral obligations and reasons for action, and will make various moral responses and expectations appropriate (e.g. shame, regret, mistrust, criticism, mutual education, reparative and resistant action). While existing theories of complicity cannot explain why and how we hold individuals accountable for unknowing, blameless participation in diffuse wrongs and structural injustice, my view clarifies our actual practices and supports a wider repertoire of ethical responses

    Meconium: A Potential Means to Predicting Later-Life Cognition

    Full text link
    Maternal perinatal stress is a commonly experienced, yet chronically undiagnosed condition (CDC, 2010). Literature has suggested that perinatal stress exposure has long lasting implications of the developing child both physically and mentally (Behrman et al., 2007; Hobel et al., 2008; Bowman et al., 2004; Polanska et al., 2017; Van de Bergh et. al, 2020). The use of meconium in the clinical setting has become one that serves a purpose of detection in medical conditions like in utero drug exposure. Using meconium as a predictor for brain behavior, however, is still an emerging concept in the literature. It is quickly gaining attention as interest in the gut microbiome and its large-scale impact on the body grows. Hu et al. (2019), for example, investigated the relationship between maternal anxiety and the infant gut microbiome. They found that pregnancy related anxiety was associated with lower levels of enterococcaceae from newborn meconium. This study seeks to evaluate meconium’s predictive value in identifying child risk for cognitive impairment. One-way ANOVA, two-way ANOVA, and linear regression analysis were used to test the relationship of 43 participants enterococcaceae levels at birth and cognitive scores measured using the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence - Fourth Edition (WPPSI-IV) between the ages of four and seven years old. No significant associations of enterococcaceae level and cognition were found. Despite the negative findings, the limited sample size of this study warrants an expanded investigation into the relationship of enterococcaceae level and cognition in perinatally stress children in order to achieve a greater understanding of the “brain- gut connection”. That, in turn, will add further description on the gut microbiota influence on brain behavior

    The Film, the Stadium and the Jail: The Post-Industrial Transformation of Downtown Durham

    Full text link
    By the late 1980s, Durham, North Carolina’s downtown-based industrial economy had been replaced by a powerful knowledge economy in the city’s peripheries. Downtown Durham’s vast array of tobacco and textiles manufacturing buildings stood empty, along with most of its commercial spaces, offices and sidewalks. This thesis argues that the local development of two major public works, a baseball stadium (the Durham Bulls Athletic Park) and a jail (the Durham County Detention Center), conceived and constructed on similar timelines in close physical proximity, was indicative of how—and for whom—city and county officials envisioned a revitalized downtown. The first chapter examines the complex mythic and material interplay between the film Bull Durham (1988) and post-industrial Durham, how the film helped produce the Durham Bulls Athletic Park, and how the stadium represented (and ultimately, helped instantiate) city officials’ efforts to attract a wealthier knowledge economy class to the city center, in lieu of ameliorating the city’s residual social needs. The second chapter argues that the development and architectural form of the Durham County Detention Center—belying its reformist aspirations—served foremost to expand the county’s capacity to confine its post-industrial, overwhelmingly Black, ‘surplus’ population. By the time both were fully open, the stadium and the jail, dominating the skyline from the vantage point of the city’s busiest thoroughfare, broadcast officials’ split vision for downtown’s future—white knowledge-class leisure and Black working-class confinement

    An Introduction to Film (3rd ed.)

    Get PDF
    This textbook provides an introduction to films and the filmmaking process. Each chapter covers a different facet of filmmaking starting with a brief history of film, primarily focused on that in the USA. Then it moves into exploring how to watch films from a critical perspective. After that, there are chapters exploring the various aspects of filmmaking: mise-en-scène, narrative, cinematography, editing, sound, and acting. Finally, the textbook ends wiith a look at documentary and experimental films with an additional look at animation

    Movimento de Arte Pornô (1980–84): Poetry, Performance, and Pansexuality

    Full text link
    This dissertation focuses on the Movimento de Arte Pornô (Porn Art movement), a networked group of Brazilian visual artists and poets who embraced pornography in their aesthetic practices from 1980 to 1984, during the Abertura, a transitional process from dictatorship to democracy. Seeking to uproot the conservative values that had shaped Brazilian society under the dictatorship, the group proposed a provocative—pansexual—cultural project with performances and interventions in the public sphere, visual works, and DIY porn art publications. Centering the body as a major source of artistic enunciation and the ultimate site for its fruition, the movement embraced porn as a tool of subject production and identity formation through pleasure. In this dissertation I argue that the artists from the Porn Art movement embraced porn to assert it as an important mode for sexual minorities to mobilize as an agent of their own representation and pleasure, creating diverse pornographies with hybrid media and inviting viewers to cultivate multiple subjectivities. Chapter 1 places the movement in dialogue with the historical Brazilian avant-garde, most notably the “cannibalist” movement of Antropofagia. This chapter highlights how both groups embraced societal taboos rooted in the body—cannibalism and pornography—to stimulate new formal experimentation. In this chapter I compare these two movements to argue that if Antropofagia embraced the image of the cannibal to construct national identity through the metaphorical digestion of cultures, the Porn Art movement turned to the production of subjects who are shaped by images and embodied experiences. Chapter 2 examines the Porn Art interventions of Gang, a subgroup of artists who articulated the movement as a whole and organized publications and performances in Rio de Janeiro. I argue that Gang’s artworks subverted the traditional experience of pornography, from the private and individual to the public and collective realm, converting pornographic affect (e.g., sexual arousal) into shared experiences, such as collective laughter and the vocalization of bawdy words, that might transform the public sphere. Chapter 3 focuses on the production of women artists participating in the movement: Leila Míccolis, Teresa Jardim, Sandra Terra, Denise Trindade, and Cynthia Dorneles. These artists embraced sexuality and the body as fundamental themes in their artistic and poetic practices, asserting themselves as desiring subjects and criticizing social structures that repress women. In this chapter I argue that these women artists subverted the masculinist and heteronormative conventions of the genre by asserting their voices as sexual subjects and agents of production and claiming their right to pleasure. Chapter 4 focuses on the Xerox artworks by Hudinilson Jr. and Eduardo Kac, as well as the Porn Art network facilitated by this technology. In this chapter I argue that, for these artists, the Xerox machine functioned as an allegory of pornography. By considering porn as an apparatus that followed specific codes of representation, these artists tampered with the Xerox machine to evidence the artificiality of pornography and the role of reproductive technology in the creation of subjects

    Racial and Neighborhood Disparities in New York City Criminal Summons Practices

    Full text link
    The purpose of this study is to assess trends in criminal summons practices by the New York City Police Department (NYPD), including if and how they disproportionately impact low income and/or Black and Brown communities. The New York City Council commissioned the study as part of the Police Reform and Reinvention Collaborative Plan. Approved March 2021, the goals of this plan were both to document and ameliorate policies and practices that have led to historic injustices and over-policing of low-income New Yorkers and communities of color

    Herding Cats: The Benefits and Challenges of a Large Research and Development Team

    Full text link
    We explore the journey of a nine-member-and-growing research team that is collaborating to develop, implement, and study a Computer Integrated Teacher Education (CITE) program at an urban commuter college. Team members have a range of subject area expertise and research training, as well as full-time jobs in the education field. The multi-member team has learned from each other and enriched the final products while facing challenges resulting from the composition of the team

    27,672

    full texts

    32,180

    metadata records
    Updated in last 30 days.
    City University of New York is based in United States
    Access Repository Dashboard
    Do you manage Open Research Online? Become a CORE Member to access insider analytics, issue reports and manage access to outputs from your repository in the CORE Repository Dashboard! 👇